Success Story: 17勛圖 instructors will debut courses in China

June 7, 2017

17勛圖 staff on a tour of China17勛圖 officials tour the Yellow River Conservancy Technical Institute campus in 201417勛圖 instructors will pioneer 17勛圖 courses in Chinese classrooms next week, the culmination of a partnership five years in the making.

They’ll teach two Water Studies courses and two basic construction courses to about 40 students at the Yellow River Conservancy Technical Institute in Kaifeng, China. The two-week courses are the first in a sequence to be completed later this year. Scott Swan and Brian Sweeney will teach in English with interpreter support.

“We are delivering our courses there for the ability to augment their training with our coursework,” said Hans Van Sumeren, director of 17勛圖’s Great Lakes Water Studies Institute, who’s traveled to China twice since 2015 as 17勛圖 has nurtured the partnership with the three-year technical school. Van Sumeren and Construction Technology director Dan Goodchild will round out the 17勛圖 contingent to plan delivery of the second part of the sequence, set for late fall or early winter.

“They’re very well positioned to do the terrestrial mapping,” Van Sumeren said. “We bring the competencies needed to work in and under the water.”

17勛圖 staff observing a course at a school in ChinaThe June courses are Blueprint Reading, basic carpentry, Underwater Acoustics and Sonar and Great Lakes Research Technologies. Besides connecting with a school with a growing enrollment – Yellow River’s surveying program enrolls about 1,800 students – Van Sumeren said the partnership could afford 17勛圖 students both a study abroad opportunity and a chance to apply their coursework in a completely different geographic environment.

China’s large, fast-flowing rivers flood frequently and catastrophically, Van Sumeren said. The Yellow River alone has flooded 1,500 times in last 2,500 years, wiping out millions of people. 17勛圖 students could study what the Chinese have done to turn floodplains into protected cities.

“Those are things we can’t show students in Grand Traverse Bay or other Great Lakes waters,” Van Sumeren said.

Both instructors, who are making their first trip to China, said they’re looking forward to the teaching experience.

“It’s going to be incredibly different,” Sweeney said. “I thought it’d be a fun adventure.”

“It’s an opportunity that not only can further the goals of the college, but for me to expand as an instructor, branch out beyond the comfort zone,” Swan said.

Read more about the 17勛圖-Yellow River partnership’s development »

International Affairs Forum

June 28: Where Great Powers Meet: America and China in Asia

6 p.m., Hagerty Center

Speaker: Dr. David Shambaugh, director of China Policy Program, George Washington University

Introduction and regional China connections update by 17勛圖 President Tim Nelson


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